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Worsening cognitive impairment and neurodegenerative pathology progressively increase risk for delirium

Davis, D. H. J.; Skelly, D.T .; Murray, C.; Hennessy, E.; Bowen, J.; Norton, S.; Brayne, C.; Rahkonen, T.; Sulkava, R.; Sanderson, D. J.; Rawlins, J. N. P.; Bannerman, D. M.; MacLullich, A. M. J.; Cunningham, C.

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Authors

D. H. J. Davis

D.T . Skelly

C. Murray

E. Hennessy

J. Bowen

S. Norton

C. Brayne

T. Rahkonen

R. Sulkava

J. N. P. Rawlins

D. M. Bannerman

A. M. J. MacLullich

C. Cunningham



Abstract

Background: Delirium is a profound neuropsychiatric disturbance precipitated by acute illness. Although dementia is the major risk factor this has typically been considered a binary quantity (i.e., cognitively impaired versus cognitively normal) with respect to delirium risk. We used humans and mice to address the hypothesis that the severity of underlying neurodegenerative changes and/or cognitive impairment progressively alters delirium risk. Methods: Humans in a population-based longitudinal study, Vantaa 85+, were followed for incident delirium. Odds for reporting delirium at follow-up (outcome) were modeled using random-effects logistic regression, where prior cognitive impairment measured by Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE) (exposure) was considered. To address whether underlying neurodegenerative pathology increased susceptibility to acute cognitive change, mice at three stages of neurodegenerative disease progression (ME7 model of neurodegeneration: controls, 12 weeks, and 16 weeks) were assessed for acute cognitive dysfunction upon systemic inflammation induced by bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS; 100 μg/kg). Synaptic and axonal correlates of susceptibility to acute dysfunction were assessed using immunohistochemistry. Results: In the Vantaa cohort, 465 persons (88.4 ± 2.8 years) completed MMSE at baseline. For every MMSE point lost, risk of incident delirium increased by 5% (p = 0.02). LPS precipitated severe and fluctuating cognitive deficits in 16-week ME7 mice but lower incidence or no deficits in 12-week ME7 and controls, respectively. This was associated with progressive thalamic synaptic loss and axonal pathology. Conclusions: A human population-based cohort with graded severity of existing cognitive impairment and a mouse model with progressing neurodegeneration both indicate that the risk of delirium increases with greater severity of pre-existing cognitive impairment and neuropathology.

Citation

Davis, D. H. J., Skelly, D. .., Murray, C., Hennessy, E., Bowen, J., Norton, S., …Cunningham, C. (2015). Worsening cognitive impairment and neurodegenerative pathology progressively increase risk for delirium. American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 23(4), 403-415. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jagp.2014.08.005

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Aug 8, 2014
Publication Date Apr 1, 2015
Deposit Date Sep 16, 2014
Publicly Available Date Aug 28, 2015
Journal American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry
Print ISSN 1064-7481
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 23
Issue 4
Pages 403-415
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jagp.2014.08.005
Keywords Delirium, Dementia, Neurodegeneration, Neuropathology, Synaptic, Axonal, Thalamus, Hippocampus, Basal forebrain, Ageing, Cognitive decline, Systemic, Inflammation, Susceptibility, Neuroinflammation.
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1445360

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Publisher Licence URL
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Copyright Statement
Open Access funded by Wellcome Trust. This article is available under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY).
You may copy and distribute the article, create extracts, abstracts and new works from the article, alter and revise the article, text or data mine the article and otherwise reuse the article commercially (including reuse and/or resale of the article) without permission from Elsevier. You must give appropriate credit to the original work, together with a link to the formal publication through the relevant DOI and a link to the Creative Commons user license above. You must indicate if any changes are made but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use of the work.





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